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		<title>BLOOMBERG L.P. May Hire an Ombudsman for News Conflicts</title>

		<comments>http://observer.com/2001/11/bloomberg-lp-may-hire-an-ombudsman-for-news-conflicts/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 19 Nov 2001 00:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/2001/11/bloomberg-lp-may-hire-an-ombudsman-for-news-conflicts/</link>
			<dc:creator>Sridhar Pappu</dc:creator>
				
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.observer.com/2001/11/bloomberg-lp-may-hire-an-ombudsman-for-news-conflicts/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>On Tuesday, Nov. 6, when voters elected media honcho and</p>
<p>billionaire Michael Bloomberg as the city's 108th Mayor, they spawned a</p>
<p>scenario destined for the tweedy enclaves of college ethics classes: How does</p>
<p>Bloomberg News cover a city whose policies and economy would now be overseen by</p>
<p>Mr. Bloomberg himself? How could its editors and reporters be objective while</p>
<p>reporting on the man who was once  their boss?</p>
<p> "There's never been a recent situation like this in this country</p>
<p>that I can think of," said Columbia University</p>
<p>journalism professor Sreenath Sreenivasan.</p>
<p>"There's definitely an issue here about how Bloomberg [the news service]</p>
<p>handles Bloomberg [the Mayor]. You don't see a Clinton</p>
<p>news service or a Giuliani news service."</p>
<p> Nonetheless, Mr. Sreenivasan expects</p>
<p>the people at Bloomberg will work it out. And perhaps Matt Winkler, Bloomberg</p>
<p>News editor in chief, already has.</p>
<p> Mr. Winkler said on Nov. 12 that at least one answer might lie in</p>
<p>the form of an ombudsman.</p>
<p> "It would be someone not working at Bloomberg," Mr. Winkler said,</p>
<p>"who'd be able to give independent analysis to our coverage. I don't think it's</p>
<p>such a bad idea, anyway. Of all the things I've heard, it's one of the best."</p>
<p> Meanwhile, these are strange days for Bloomberg News, whose</p>
<p>staffers-like the rest of New York-were</p>
<p>caught off-guard by Mr. Bloomberg's meteoric rise from political neophyte to</p>
<p>head of the largest city in the United States.</p>
<p>Indeed, for most of the campaign, the news operation assumed the position of a</p>
<p>kid in a tornado drill: head down, waiting for someone to say it was over.</p>
<p> Though it reported poll results, Bloomberg News avoided any</p>
<p>original coverage of Mr. Bloomberg or his competition in the Republican Party</p>
<p>primary and the general election. Stories about the race carried via Bloomberg</p>
<p>terminals were restricted to summarizing reports in other publications.</p>
<p> Explaining that approach in the last weeks of the campaign, Mr.</p>
<p>Winkler put it this way: "Because of who he is to the</p>
<p>company, it's impossible to cover him. And because of that, we can't cover</p>
<p>anyone else.</p>
<p> "If he wins, he's Mayor," Mr. Winkler said then. "Should we get</p>
<p>to that point, we'll have to look at our coverage and define what we can or</p>
<p>can't do."</p>
<p> Well, come Jan. 1, he's Mayor. And poll-shocked Bloombergers have been left to question what that means to</p>
<p>the news division-particularly those in the nearly year-old New York general</p>
<p>news bureau-as their leader meets with the Reverend Al Sharpton</p>
<p>and union chiefs and begins the process of fortifying and rebuilding New York.</p>
<p> "It's just weird," one Bloomberg source said. "That's the only</p>
<p>way to describe it. It might be good for the city, but I don't know what it</p>
<p>means for us."</p>
<p> Said another: "Everyone was shocked. I</p>
<p>think we all were in denial. Matt's a tough journalist, but I don't think he</p>
<p>thought about it very much. He's probably thinking about it now."</p>
<p> Adding to the general uncertainty were stories on Sunday in the London Observer and then in Monday's New York Post , which restarted an old</p>
<p>rumor that Thomson Corporation, owner of the Thomson Financial news network,</p>
<p>had made an overture to buy all of Bloomberg L.P.-the news division included.</p>
<p> "I can't say there's anything</p>
<p>to it," Mr. Winkler said on Nov. 12. "I'd be shocked if I didn't know anything</p>
<p>about it. It was reported in one of the British newspapers, right? Then I don't</p>
<p>need to say any more …. They're entertaining, but they also produce a lot of</p>
<p>fiction."</p>
<p> For his part, Mr. Winkler said that he was fully prepared for</p>
<p>either outcome to the election and was confident in his</p>
<p>troops' ability, ombudsman or no, to report stories concerning</p>
<p>the man under whose name they toil. He said a strict adherence to Bloom-berg's just-the-facts-ma'am</p>
<p>style-detailed in the 300-plus pages of the company's stylebook, and pummeled</p>
<p>into reporters in weeks of training sessions-was key.</p>
<p>In addition, he said, stories concerning Mr. Bloomberg will include disclaimers</p>
<p>as a way of "vaccinating the reporting."</p>
<p> As for the personnel issues raised in</p>
<p>the days immediately after the election, Mr. Winkler met with those directly</p>
<p>affected by the election-the editors and writers of the 17-person metro news</p>
<p>desk. Headed by longtime Daily News editor</p>
<p>Rich Rosen, the desk includes former Philadelphia</p>
<p>Inquirer New York City bureau chief Henry Goldman, who now has the uneasy</p>
<p>task of covering City Hall.</p>
<p> In speaking with them, Mr. Winkler said he answered questions,</p>
<p>praised the work they'd done and tried to reassure them that "there's still a</p>
<p>place here for the kind of work they've been doing."</p>
<p> "If I have doubts about a certain type of reporting," Mr. Winkler</p>
<p>said, "it's this: something along the lines of Clinton-Lewinsky,</p>
<p>Round 2. We can't do the personal-life stuff; it's fraught with danger. Policy, institutional stories, serious stuff-that's what we can</p>
<p>do."</p>
<p> Nevertheless, being a Bloomberg reporter means something</p>
<p>different from what it did a year ago. During the campaign, Bloombergers</p>
<p>suddenly found themselves playing the role of political seismologists. With</p>
<p>interviewees and people they met on the street and at parties, often the first</p>
<p>question they were asked was, "You think he can win?"</p>
<p> Said one source: "My parents were even asking me that."</p>
<p> Now the question will become, "So how do you think he's doing?"</p>
<p> "Life's a bitch," Mr. Winkler said. "Jackie Robinson said the</p>
<p>same thing. We're put in a tougher spot than our peers and competitors, but</p>
<p>that just means we have to be more rigorous and professional about the way we</p>
<p>do things. We're not about to change our name." </p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>On Tuesday, Nov. 6, when voters elected media honcho and</p>
<p>billionaire Michael Bloomberg as the city's 108th Mayor, they spawned a</p>
<p>scenario destined for the tweedy enclaves of college ethics classes: How does</p>
<p>Bloomberg News cover a city whose policies and economy would now be overseen by</p>
<p>Mr. Bloomberg himself? How could its editors and reporters be objective while</p>
<p>reporting on the man who was once  their boss?</p>
<p> "There's never been a recent situation like this in this country</p>
<p>that I can think of," said Columbia University</p>
<p>journalism professor Sreenath Sreenivasan.</p>
<p>"There's definitely an issue here about how Bloomberg [the news service]</p>
<p>handles Bloomberg [the Mayor]. You don't see a Clinton</p>
<p>news service or a Giuliani news service."</p>
<p> Nonetheless, Mr. Sreenivasan expects</p>
<p>the people at Bloomberg will work it out. And perhaps Matt Winkler, Bloomberg</p>
<p>News editor in chief, already has.</p>
<p> Mr. Winkler said on Nov. 12 that at least one answer might lie in</p>
<p>the form of an ombudsman.</p>
<p> "It would be someone not working at Bloomberg," Mr. Winkler said,</p>
<p>"who'd be able to give independent analysis to our coverage. I don't think it's</p>
<p>such a bad idea, anyway. Of all the things I've heard, it's one of the best."</p>
<p> Meanwhile, these are strange days for Bloomberg News, whose</p>
<p>staffers-like the rest of New York-were</p>
<p>caught off-guard by Mr. Bloomberg's meteoric rise from political neophyte to</p>
<p>head of the largest city in the United States.</p>
<p>Indeed, for most of the campaign, the news operation assumed the position of a</p>
<p>kid in a tornado drill: head down, waiting for someone to say it was over.</p>
<p> Though it reported poll results, Bloomberg News avoided any</p>
<p>original coverage of Mr. Bloomberg or his competition in the Republican Party</p>
<p>primary and the general election. Stories about the race carried via Bloomberg</p>
<p>terminals were restricted to summarizing reports in other publications.</p>
<p> Explaining that approach in the last weeks of the campaign, Mr.</p>
<p>Winkler put it this way: "Because of who he is to the</p>
<p>company, it's impossible to cover him. And because of that, we can't cover</p>
<p>anyone else.</p>
<p> "If he wins, he's Mayor," Mr. Winkler said then. "Should we get</p>
<p>to that point, we'll have to look at our coverage and define what we can or</p>
<p>can't do."</p>
<p> Well, come Jan. 1, he's Mayor. And poll-shocked Bloombergers have been left to question what that means to</p>
<p>the news division-particularly those in the nearly year-old New York general</p>
<p>news bureau-as their leader meets with the Reverend Al Sharpton</p>
<p>and union chiefs and begins the process of fortifying and rebuilding New York.</p>
<p> "It's just weird," one Bloomberg source said. "That's the only</p>
<p>way to describe it. It might be good for the city, but I don't know what it</p>
<p>means for us."</p>
<p> Said another: "Everyone was shocked. I</p>
<p>think we all were in denial. Matt's a tough journalist, but I don't think he</p>
<p>thought about it very much. He's probably thinking about it now."</p>
<p> Adding to the general uncertainty were stories on Sunday in the London Observer and then in Monday's New York Post , which restarted an old</p>
<p>rumor that Thomson Corporation, owner of the Thomson Financial news network,</p>
<p>had made an overture to buy all of Bloomberg L.P.-the news division included.</p>
<p> "I can't say there's anything</p>
<p>to it," Mr. Winkler said on Nov. 12. "I'd be shocked if I didn't know anything</p>
<p>about it. It was reported in one of the British newspapers, right? Then I don't</p>
<p>need to say any more …. They're entertaining, but they also produce a lot of</p>
<p>fiction."</p>
<p> For his part, Mr. Winkler said that he was fully prepared for</p>
<p>either outcome to the election and was confident in his</p>
<p>troops' ability, ombudsman or no, to report stories concerning</p>
<p>the man under whose name they toil. He said a strict adherence to Bloom-berg's just-the-facts-ma'am</p>
<p>style-detailed in the 300-plus pages of the company's stylebook, and pummeled</p>
<p>into reporters in weeks of training sessions-was key.</p>
<p>In addition, he said, stories concerning Mr. Bloomberg will include disclaimers</p>
<p>as a way of "vaccinating the reporting."</p>
<p> As for the personnel issues raised in</p>
<p>the days immediately after the election, Mr. Winkler met with those directly</p>
<p>affected by the election-the editors and writers of the 17-person metro news</p>
<p>desk. Headed by longtime Daily News editor</p>
<p>Rich Rosen, the desk includes former Philadelphia</p>
<p>Inquirer New York City bureau chief Henry Goldman, who now has the uneasy</p>
<p>task of covering City Hall.</p>
<p> In speaking with them, Mr. Winkler said he answered questions,</p>
<p>praised the work they'd done and tried to reassure them that "there's still a</p>
<p>place here for the kind of work they've been doing."</p>
<p> "If I have doubts about a certain type of reporting," Mr. Winkler</p>
<p>said, "it's this: something along the lines of Clinton-Lewinsky,</p>
<p>Round 2. We can't do the personal-life stuff; it's fraught with danger. Policy, institutional stories, serious stuff-that's what we can</p>
<p>do."</p>
<p> Nevertheless, being a Bloomberg reporter means something</p>
<p>different from what it did a year ago. During the campaign, Bloombergers</p>
<p>suddenly found themselves playing the role of political seismologists. With</p>
<p>interviewees and people they met on the street and at parties, often the first</p>
<p>question they were asked was, "You think he can win?"</p>
<p> Said one source: "My parents were even asking me that."</p>
<p> Now the question will become, "So how do you think he's doing?"</p>
<p> "Life's a bitch," Mr. Winkler said. "Jackie Robinson said the</p>
<p>same thing. We're put in a tougher spot than our peers and competitors, but</p>
<p>that just means we have to be more rigorous and professional about the way we</p>
<p>do things. We're not about to change our name." </p>
]]></content:encoded>
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